Startling statistics on teenager suicide, pregnancy and other social ills reflects NZ government’s disregard for the outdoors and its solid values says Tony Orman
National and its leader Christopher Luxon recently promoted
military style training for wayward youths as a solution to rampant youth
crime.
The furore from the “goody two shoes” brigade lambasting
National for the concept of boot camps for wayward youth has been loud. To my
understanding, Luxon never mentioned the phrase “boot camps” although critics
in both the media and Labour/Greens government have conveniently used “boot
camps” to denigrate the concept.
Despite these attempts to smear the concept the majority of the public, going by radio talk back, favour the idea.
Unfortunately National with clumsy P.R. reportedly mentioned
“military”. That was a clumsy mistake - it would’ve been far better to have
modelled the concept positively on Outward Bound.
Former Chief Science Officer Sir Peter Gluckman told ZB’s
Heather du Plessis-Allan that taking young offenders out of environments from
which they can return to is unlikely to work, as it hasn’t in the past. He says
any proposed solution needs to be independently assessed, and more transparency
is needed on the outcome.
Well Gluckman is somewhat astray. I was drafted into
Compulsory Military Training (CMT) in the 1950s. As one who is long enough in
the tooth to have done CMT in the late 1950s, I can recall the 14 week stint
did wonders for practically all entrants. It built self esteem, taught
discipline and educated in special skills. It moulded bullies into shape as
bullying is really reflecting a lack of self esteem. It turned youngsters
turned from “mummy boys” into strapping youth. It also instilled personal
discipline.
Note it was compulsory training for all 18 year olds.
Turning to today’s youth crime tsunamis, the wayward youth
indulging in ram raids and other crimes are simply lacking self esteem and of
course discipline.
National’s idea is good in principle and should be pursued
with Youth Training modelled on Outward Bound. Teach them outdoor skills in
survival, bushcraft, an awareness of the natural world, respect, safety and use
of firearms, people skills and other attributes.
Really the problems of youth have been glaringly obvious for
decades. New Zealand’s youth have been struggling for many years and over
successive decades increasingly so, leading to the current tsunami.
Statistics
In 2020, UNICEF New Zealand clearly spelt out the
situation as regards tomorrow’s citizens.
“UNICEF New Zealand is calling for significant investment
and policy change to address deeply embedded and terrifying childhood trends
around obesity, suicide, as well as declining proficiency in reading and maths,
following the release of comparative data today as part of UNICEF’s Report Card.’
“Out of 41 EU and OECD countries, New Zealand ranks 35th in
child wellbeing outcomes.”
“New Zealand has the second highest obesity rate in the
OECD. More than 1 in 3 children are obese or overweight. “
“Meanwhile only 64.6% of 15 year olds in New Zealand have
basic proficiency in reading and maths.”
UNICEF New Zealand Executive Director Vivien Maidaborn said
these poor grades showed New Zealand was failing its children.
New Zealand’s youth suicide rate is the second worst in the
developed world at 14.9 deaths per 100,000 adolescents.
This rate is more than twice the average among the 41 OECD
countries surveyed (6.5 deaths per 100,000 adolescents). This report references
the most recent and comparable data across 41 countries.
Tragic Failure
“The Report Card gives New Zealand an F for failure when it
comes to well-being outcomes for children,” said Vivien Maidaborn. “This is a
woeful result for a country that prides itself on the great outdoors, academic
achievement, and the international success of our sports teams. It is time to
be alarmed and activated about the inequality of opportunity, health and
wellbeing in NZ.”
The current government generated much hype about this year’s
budget, with Finance Minister Robertson describing it as a “well-being” one.
Prime Minister Ardern joined in the exultation. It was meaningless political
rhetoric.
To reiterate, it’s nothing new. Take youth suicides. They
have been on the increase since the 1980s.
The OECD Family Database showed New Zealand in 1990 and 2000
had consistently high teenage suicides in the 15 to 19 year bracket at about 16
per 100,000 persons. Not one of the governments - led by Lange, Clark, Key or
Ardern - seemed concerned.
Consequently by 2015 this had risen to 24 per 100,000 and
the unenviable position then of being the worst country for teenage
suicides.
If New Zealand governments turned a blind eye, even some
overseas sources seemed aware of New Zealand’s youth problem. Three years ago,
British healthcare think tank the Nuffield Trust said New Zealand ranks
poorly in terms of adolescent suicide and teenage pregnancies.
Flabby Obesity
New Zealand’s society has deteriorated. Technological
developments are amazing and bewildering but not always for the common good. At
the same time new Zealanders are falling prey to the weakness of an indoor
nation and the flabby obesity of a sedentary society.
New Zealand has lost its way and particularly with its
younger people.
It is nothing new.
Yet the grim statistics do not get much publicity as
governments turn a blind eye or sweep it under the proverbial carpet.
Sadly today some youths, often just in their early teens,
are committing heinous crimes or indulged in senseless vandalism and
irresponsible behaviour. Because of a mixture of boredom, bewilderment and
a feeling of helplessness, youngsters are lashing out.
Some are killing themselves to escape.
Their confidence for the future was often uncertain and
self-esteem frequently low.
Young people have energies to burn which if not channelled
down the right path, have the potential to go awry. But the outdoors and
pursuits like fishing and hunting are healthy outlets for that adolescent
energy. Stalking and shooting a rabbit or catching a kahawai, snapper or trout
is an achievement and those successes build confidence, self-belief and self
esteem to make them better people and better citizens.
Society wins.
Under good tuition, a youngster learns qualities like
patience, observation and an appreciation in just being outdoors and a respect
for the fish or game that is pursued. A youngster can be taught to fish or hunt
wisely, never taking more than is needed and not killing wantonly.
But things have been stacked up against outdoor recreation
by government policies that often have direct or indirect detrimental impact.
And it’s increasingly so in the modern, rapidly changing society of today.
Modern life is confused by a growing imbalance between the spread of man and
his developments and nature.
We should be encouraging young New Zealanders into the
outdoors. But
sadly government priorities and policies don’t give incentive but even spawn
disincentives by way of policies. One impediment to access to the outdoors is
increasing foreign ownership of New Zealand farms resulting in locked gates in
contrast to once when most Kiwi farming families willingly granted access.
Pollution
Rivers that youngsters once swam and fished in, have had
flows depleted by irrigation for corporate dairying. In turn, nitrates and
other pollution have fouled water quality.
Alarmingly 61 percent of NZ’s lowland rivers are rated unfit
for swimming.
New Zealanders are not getting outdoors. Young New
Zealanders are losing their connection with the outdoors while youth obesity,
mental health and suicide rates are unacceptably high for a country of just 5
million people.
New Zealanders have been duped by an “imagined Godzone
self portrayal”. The outdoors, despite being a a great playground and classroom
for youngsters to learn observational and outdoor skills to get
physical exercise and mental stimulation and good values, were being
eroded by development, exploitation and bureaucratic policies.
The fact is we are not serving young people well and
government policies are blocking access for the public to the outdoors.
A very recent report reiterated New Zealand adolescents had
ranked high in OECD countries’ teenage suicide and pregnancies
rates. It prompted New Zealand’s Neuroscience educator Nathan
Wallis in 2019 to express deep concern.
"We've got this idea that New Zealand is this
wonderful, clean, green, beautiful nation that is a wonderful place to raise
children, so this paints a different picture,” he said.
Outward Bound
There was a very good model for youth education in Outward
Bound in the Marlborough Sounds but the philosophy was being ignored by
governments. Referring to "loss of access to the outdoors"
numerous policies of government are factors. Dirty rivers like Canterbury’s
Selwyn once a fully flowing, clean clear river, a world-revered dry fly trout
and swimming river are now algae infested and toxic. Many other rivers have
summer warnings of toxic algae due to depleted flows and nutrient leaching.
Other government policies adversely impact directly or
indirectly, on the public’s outdoors. The widespread use of poisons such as
1080 is not only unjustified but ecologically disruptive and poisoning public
lands. Who wants to tramp, fish or hunt in an area top-dressed with toxic
baits?
An open door policy of successive governments over decades
to encourage foreigners to buy farms and in particular high country and farm
land often resulted in locked gates and denials of access over large areas.
Saltwater fisheries mismanagement gave commercial fishing companies
interests far higher ranking than recreational fishing.
Billion Dollars
Yet just looking at it economically recreational
fishing stimulates over a billion dollars a year in economic activity.
A Horizon survey of sporting participation rates in
2012 showed fishing had more than five times more people
participating than rugby. Twenty-six percent enjoyed fishing while just five
percent played rugby.
When it came to “getting off the couch”, 25.5 percent of
adult men and 18 percent of women fished while with youth, about 35 percent
went fishing.
Yet government, society and media gave far more attention to
rugby than outdoor recreation such as fishing.
The list goes on and on where governments out of ignorance
have let the public and particularly youngsters down by policies allowing the
despoiling of the outdoors. The solution to helping young Kiwis out of
their predicament is a recognition of the priceless value of outdoor recreation
whether it be fishing, hunting, tramping or others, to youngsters.
From once being an outdoor-minded people, New Zealanders
have become sedentary, stressed, uncertain and often lost. The youth statistics
mirror that.
At least National is attempting to find a solution.
Tony Orman has spent a lifetime in the
outdoors, fishing and hunting and has had some two dozen books published on
outdoors.
12 comments:
Tony makes some fair points.
I shared a post hunting meal with an ex East Coast policeman who took troubled youth into the bush in an attempt to end a youth crime wave in Wairoa. (After exhausting the usual responses). The project was a success and grew. Unfortunately this chap became so disillusioned with the present PC culture that he now works as a builder.
Liking this article, the Author makes sense in what he says.
Outward Bound is a fantastic opportunity for anyone to give a go and would definitely benefit teenagers.
Also the CMT does teach you a lot of skills along with the self esteem and discipline, had 2 friends I know who did this and both ae still living in getting outdoors and good ethics.
Hope National will follow through on their idea.
Hello Tony
Wise words and common sense suggestions.
Unfortunately, our temporary government employees don't seem very wise or sensible.
They seem to beleive that the only solution for every problem is.
1. Make more restrictive regulations to prohibit us from doing things.
2. Spend more money that we do not have to increase the bureaucratic burden we have to bear.
These "well meaning" do-gooders fail to realize that people can regulate themselves and take responsibility for the consequences of their own decisions if the are encouraged to and ALLOWED TO.
Outdoor experiences help us learn to be self-sufficient, independent, responsible and disciplined because nature does not care about our preferrences and precious little feelings.
Hunting, fishing, tramping and other real nature experiences teach us that this is reality and we need to deal with it and get over thinking we can control everything to suit ourselves.
The CMT you mention was similar. Here are some real challenges. Get over it and deal with them.
I find "GET OVER IT" to be very good advice.
Instead of feeling sorry for ourselves, complaining and asking someone else to fix things for us we can all GET OVER IT AND GET ON WITH DOING WHAT NEEEDS TO BE DONE to solve our own problemns responsibly and independently without harming anyone else.
Authoritarian government employees and politicians do not seem to like GET OVER IT.
They prefer for us to be more dependent upon and obedient to them.
They Pretend that they are like GOOD PARENTS who can provide for and protect us in return for our obedience and money.
Unfortunately this is a lie because "the government" cannot do all those parental things we ask it to do and OUR EMPLOYEES IN OUR GOVERNMENT SHOULD GET OVER IT AS WELL AS THE REST OF US.
The people we hire to work for us in our government cannot, feed, cloth, house, educate, heal, protect or support us, we have to do these things for ourselves and one another.
Taking our privacy, independence, freedom, property and money from us is not helping us or our "wellbeing" it has the opposite consequences and we all need to GET OVER IT.
I am retirement age and have always been involved in youth groups. I mentor 4 boys from 1 family. The eldest is 13. His education (or lack of it) is a sad case. However I don't focus on that. I do a range of things weekly with him ranging from fishing to frizzbee golf. I have made significant inroads into his development this year with getting him into a weekly youth group. This term he has done the Cactus program through school, the local Youth Trust and the Police. It is effectivly a boot camp. Turn up at 6am (anyone late and the whole group are punished) and its physical activity and then breakfast 3 mornings a week. This has had an amazing (understating it. More like life changing.) effect on my young man. He is making huge progress in the sport (outside of school) that was going nowhere.
It has completely enhanced what I am able to do with him through Mentoring.
Ever Hopeful
Very good, soundly researched and thoughtful assessment of what should be part of the answer to a major NZ social problem. Jascinda promised kindness and her personal concern. But all she does is use linguistics to berate ideas not her own. Tony offers common sense.
Tony”s got that right. These days with so many rules and regulations especially when it comes to outdoor education in schools, My mate was a guidance councillor at a college for thirty years and every year took countless kids tramping some of the lucky keen ones got to go hunting but then rules and regulations made it so difficult and the consequences of a mishap made him give it up now the kids miss out. Also some of our rivers are so polluted they are unswimable. Then you have 1080 poison operations with the pollution of poison and and rotting carcasses in many areas putting a damper on things, access denial across private land to public land denied, huts being removed and recently huts being burnt down.
I was around when cmt was happening and I knew a pair of tough nuts who were on the way to going off the rails but after a stint in “ boot camp “ came out completely different blokes and ironically one became a top cop. I’m not sure how boot camp would go with the thieves or brutal assaulters or just straight out out real bad buggers though.
The regulators these days are making rules that seem to suit the unruly.
The Ardern regime is destroying democracy and is being held to ransom by the radical Maori element in caucus.
Many of those of Maori lineage (no full blooded left) are opposed to the Jacksons and Mahutas extremist, divisive ways.
One has only to look at the gift of Te Urewera National Park to a Maori iwi and the subsequent trashing of huts.
Trouble its it was John Key and National’s Treaty Minister Chris Finlayson who gave away the national park which by the National Park Act is for the “people of New Zealand”.
Very good article. - Bud
I was chatting to 2 groups of friends this weekend. One group of six included 2 ladies of Maori descent, both of whom stated that the solution to youth offending was more discipline, applied fairly through some national organisation. The other group consisted of 4 elderly adults, all of whom agreed that they had experienced mdisciplined career training including CMT, nursing training, and service in the Merchant Navy. Experience at Outward Bound and the Spirit of Adventure Trust were also mentioned. There seems to be no vehicle where the accummulated wisdom of such people can be considered, as surely we all acknowlege that practical experience beats theoretical "information". We trust that these sorts of opinion and experience will be fully considered by the incoming government, as we are sure that the present band of political incompetents would be unwilling to listen!
Sorry but I think Tony's views are out of date or perhaps just pie in the sky. As I see it we have two problems. One the ambulance at the bottom of the cliff which is the 'juvenile delinquency' problem. These are the 'ram raiding' kids that hit the headlines.
But the real problem is the issue of kids growing up in disfunctional households, solo parenthood and absentee fathers. Until we accept that we will have to make it at least unpleasant to be a solo parent we will always have the problem. See Thomas Sowell on the effects of the 1960's social welfare programs in the US on US black statistics, it all got worse very quickly.
I don't see hunting/fishing type programs as being anything other than a reward for bad behaviour! The good kids would love to do that sort of thing too.
The only practical thing I can suggest is that kids who are absent from school lose a days worth of benefit for each day absent. This would mean administratively school admins would have to have a direct link to Social Welfare. This could put pressure on the parent to make sure the kids went to school and the kids would also feel the affect of absences, especially if the deduction occurred with the next benefit grant(it's not a payment). That's the nasty side! The upside of course is that kids in school learn, there is a pretty direct relationship to presence and achievement..
BTW regarding obesity, you only have to look at cereal consumption figures. The whole 'fat is bad' idea was a con perpetuated in the 1960s by Ancel Keys. He cherry picked data to produce a graph showing higher fat consumption led to higher heart disease (that is he ignored all the data that didn't show that relationship). I think of it quite simply, we have dieted and studied ways of losing weight for 60 years and have got fatter. The obvious question;
What is the definition of stupidity?
Cheers
James
Tony, you certainly have a heart to help the helpless, with positive ideas that make perfect sense. Unfortunately, the "right people" are unlikely to heed any sage suggestions and keep on with the revolving door of the criminals winning. As far as "military" training goes, the LSV programme (limited service volunteers" run by the NZ Defence Force has proved to be one avenue with a measure of success. This is an intensive six week course with the goal of teaching life and motivational skills to unemployed young people between 18 and 25. This course also prepares applicants for training or work as well as getting your first-aid certificate. It shows by example how youth can reach for a potential they never knew they had, within a safe and structured environment. And yes, the great outdoors plays a major part in this.
I'm inclined to agree with James, ie the ambulance at the bottom of the cliff. I'm afraid the problem of these young troublemakers sits right in the lap of the parents, many of whom will have suffered the same fate in their family and so it goes on repeating with many generations. When are we going to realize that not everyone has the instinct to become a good parent. Parenting skills need to be taught to those people, starting in school if necessary. Such families that are coming to the frequent attention of the police need to have a social worker (a real one) assigned to their family to get them on the road to success, mentors who have been successful parents themselves also would be helpful. It would be far better to spend our taxes on this rather than just increasing the handouts all the time.
CMT happened 70 odd years ago. The world has changed. We had grown up during 6 years of war and most of us had fathers, brothers, the general male population and a climate of discipline as role models. Today about half of the young do not even have fathers and discipline is seen as barely concealed child abuse. Military training would probably produce fitter, harder, more organised criminals just as jails are training grounds for crime. True we benefitted from the experience. Like many I resolved never to be forced into wearing a uniform again.
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